1 Introduction

The intention of this data audit is to find any records from the Neotoma Paleoecology Database which potentially violate Neotoma’s statement of values, especially with respect to Neotoma’s goal of aligning with principles of Indigenous data sovereignty. The authors of this audit are white researchers informed by guidance from theorists of Indigenous data sovereignty, paleo scientists, and other colleagues.

Note: the following audit contains potentially sensitive information about Indigenous ancestors. Our intent is to expose this information in order to work toward better management in the future.

2 Are any sites in Neotoma located on federal Indigenous lands?

2.1 Method

We did a spatial join for every site in Neotoma with a unique site ID to shapefiles of the borders of federal Indigenous lands in the United States and Canada, and Indigenous protected areas in Australia, and we tallied and mapped all those which intersected the borders of federal reservations. See list below.

Next, we counted those Neotoma datasets derived sites which are on federal Indigenous lands by the Neotoma constituent database with which they are associated and the kind of dataset they are.

2.2 Next Steps

Our next steps are…

3 Are the coordinates for any sites in Neotoma fuzzed?

3.1 Methods

We count any site whose geography is provided as a bounding box rather a point as fuzzed because according to the Neotoma Manual, “the lat-long box can be used either to circumscribe the areal extent of a site or to provide purposeful imprecision to the site location.” Notice that this is a liberal definition - some sites with bounding box geographies will have been so formatted for reasons other than purposeful imprecision.

We found 4552 fuzzed sites using this method. One table below documents the site names, dataset types, and constituent databases associated with fuzzed sites. The next table counts datasets associated with fuzzed sites by the type of dataset and the constituent database from which the dataset derives, and the map below documents fuzzed site locations.

3.2 Next steps

Our next steps are to refine our definition of fuzzed sites.

4 Are any samples in Neotoma from humans?

4.1 Method

We downloaded Neotoma’s taxa table and selected any taxon IDs which might describe people. See table below. (Taxon ID 6359 is Primates, and 6171 is Mammalia.)

Then we used a Neotoma API to search for any occurrences of those taxon IDs.

The map below shows the sites where human samples come from, and the table documents what information there is about those samples. Rows colored red are sensitivity level 1 because they come from North America. Rows colored orange are sensitivity level 2 because they come from elsewhere.

It should be noted that lead FAUNMAP steward Jessica Blois has removed all sample-level Homo sapiens occurrences from public access as FAUNMAP works on a policy for managing these data.

The table below counts sample records by sensitivity and constituent database.

4.2 Next steps

Our next steps are to reach out to the lead stewards for the Faunal Isotope Database, PaVeLa and FAUNMAP, so they can come to a decision about managing these human records in their databases.

5 Are any of Neotoma’s radiocarbon dates derived from humans?

5.1 Methods

We searched through two fields (notes and materialdated) from Neotoma’s geochronology table for any occurrences of words from the dictionary below.

Any rows from the geochronology table which contained one of the above words is listed in the table below. Notice that not all of these radiocarbon dates are necessarily problematic, only potentially. Further scrutiny may be needed. (We also checked against CARD’s list of radiocarbon dates deriving from human ancestors that are duplicated in Neotoma, and there was agreement between the two lists: all 60 of CARD’s records that are also in Neotoma are in the below table.)

We assigned sensitivity categories as follows: any references to human bone were assigned sensitivity level 1. Any references to human feces were assigned sensitivity level 2. References to human graves or burials also merited a 2. All other items were given sensitivity level 3. All publications linked to records in which the material dated was taxon-ambiguous bone collagen were consulted. We found that geochron IDs 21255, 29333, 29334, and 29335 definitely derive from humans. These records were therefore categorized as sensitivity level 1.

Below the color-coded table, we count records by their sensitivity and the constituent database of which they are a part.

5.2 Next steps

Reach out to stewards of relevant constituent databases and ask them to come to a decision about managing these records.

6 Are any of the collection units for Neotoma’s records from culturally sensitive areas?

6.1 Methods

We used the same dictionary from the last query to search through two fields in Neotoma’s collection units table (location and notes). Any collection units that returned one of the above words is reproduced below. The records were individually scrutinized categorized subjectively into sensitivity categories.

We counted the number of records by their constituent database and by their sensitivity. Notice that the count here is greater than the total number of collectionunits because constituent databases are linked to datasets, not collection units, and multiple datasets can derive from a single collection unit. (We did exclude the Neotoma datasettype “geochronologic”.)

6.2 Next steps

Our next steps are to reach out to the relevant constituent database stewards for sensitivity levels 1 and 2 and ask them to come to a decision about managing these records.